Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Fundamental====== In the world of investing, a company's **fundamentals** are the core factors that determine its underlying health and true worth. Think of it as the company's report card, covering everything from its financial performance to its competitive standing in the marketplace. The process of examining these factors is known as [[Fundamental Analysis]]. This approach is the bedrock of [[Value Investing]], as it focuses on the business's actual performance rather than the often-fickle moods of the stock market. Instead of getting caught up in daily price swings or hot tips, an investor focused on fundamentals asks deeper questions: Is this company profitable? Is it managed well? Does it have a lasting advantage over its rivals? By understanding these core truths, you can estimate what a business is actually worth, separate from its temporary stock price. ===== The What: The Building Blocks of Value ===== Fundamentals can be neatly divided into two categories: the numbers you can count (quantitative) and the qualities you must judge (qualitative). A savvy investor knows that both are essential for painting a complete picture of a company. ==== Quantitative Fundamentals: The Numbers Story ==== Quantitative fundamentals are the hard, measurable data points found in a company's [[Financial Statements]] (the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement). They provide a statistical snapshot of a company's financial health. While the list is long, some of the most critical fundamentals include: * **[[Revenue]]**: The total amount of money a company generates from its sales. Is it growing, stagnant, or shrinking? * **[[Earnings per Share (EPS)]]**: The company's profit divided by the number of outstanding shares. It's a key indicator of profitability. * **[[Book Value]]**: Theoretically, the company's net worth if it were to be liquidated. It's calculated as total assets minus total liabilities. * **[[Cash Flow]]**: The net amount of cash moving into and out of a business. //Positive cash flow is the lifeblood of any healthy company.// * **[[Debt-to-Equity Ratio]]**: This measures a company's financial leverage by comparing its total debt to the value of its shareholder equity. A high ratio can signal risk. * **[[Return on Equity (ROE)]]**: A measure of how efficiently a company uses its shareholders' money to generate profits. ==== Qualitative Fundamentals: The Story Behind the Numbers ==== If quantitative data is the //what//, qualitative data is the //why//. These are the intangible, non-numerical factors that can determine a company's long-term success or failure. They require judgment and a deep understanding of the business itself. Key examples include: * **Management Quality**: Are the executives experienced, honest, and rational in their capital allocation? Do they act in the best interests of shareholders? * **[[Competitive Advantage]]**: Often called an [[Economic Moat]], this is a company's sustainable edge over its competitors. It could be a powerful brand, proprietary technology, or a low-cost production model. * **Brand Strength**: Think of Coca-Cola or Apple. A strong brand commands customer loyalty and pricing power. * **Corporate Governance**: The system of rules and practices by which a company is directed and controlled. Good governance protects shareholder interests. * **Industry Landscape**: Is the company in a growing industry, or is it facing headwinds from new technologies or regulations? ===== The Why: Fundamentals vs. Market Noise ===== Focusing on fundamentals allows you to distinguish a company's true value from its stock price. This is the opposite of [[Technical Analysis]], which focuses on chart patterns and market statistics to predict future price movements. Imagine you're buying a used car. A technical analyst might obsess over the car's recent price fluctuations at different auctions. A fundamental investor, however, pops the hood. They check the engine, inspect the mileage, review the service history, and take it for a test drive. They want to know the car's //intrinsic// condition, not just its recent price tag. The legendary investor [[Benjamin Graham]] famously said that in the short run, the market is a //voting machine// (driven by popularity and sentiment), but in the long run, it's a //weighing machine// (assessing the true substance, or fundamentals, of a business). By focusing on fundamentals, you are preparing for the day the company is "weighed," not just "voted on." ===== The How: Putting It All Together ===== The ultimate goal of studying a company's fundamentals is to calculate its [[Intrinsic Value]]—an estimate of what the business is truly worth. Once you have this estimate, you can compare it to the current [[Market Price]] of its stock. If your analysis shows a company's intrinsic value is significantly higher than its market price, you may have discovered a wonderful investment opportunity. The difference between the intrinsic value and your purchase price is your [[Margin of Safety]], a crucial concept that protects you from errors in judgment and bad luck. By buying great businesses at fair prices—a decision based on fundamentals—you place the odds of long-term success firmly in your favor.